Firstly, I was banned from posting on Stack Overflow. I asked a question that didn't have enough content in it (i think) to be considered a high-quality question.
First: you are only banned from asking questions, and you can still ask one question per six months. In particular, you are still able to edit your existing questions, and to answer questions.
The main objection here: no, you asked many questions that failed to meet standards, and people repeatedly used the comments to explain to you specifically what the issues were with these questions. In some cases, they were closed as duplicates - while duplicate questions have some value to the site if you conceive of the question in a fundamentally different way, you are expected to try to search the site before asking.
The first un-deleted question I see in your history was actually closed by me; we get this sort of question all the time, which is why there are so many duplicates (not even counting deleted ones) of the reference canonical. If I copy and paste your question title into a search engine I can immediately get tons of useful information, even without specifying that it's for Python (it helps that this issue is particular to Python, of course).
But more importantly, you pasted hundreds of lines of code and expected others to fish around and figure out which line is "line 362". This is not a reasonable way to approach people for help on the Internet, even if we did offer a help desk, which we do not.
It also comes across that you are hoping to make yourself sound sympathetic and more deserving of help ("I've been staring at my code for hours looking for the problem"). There are two issues with that:
We care about directed effort, and about seeing what you learned from that effort (did you know which line is line 362? Did you try looking there? The error told you that there is a problem with indentation; what indentation do you think that line had? Did you think that was the correct indentation? Why? Specifically what was your reasoning?). We care about these things because they make the question better.
We don't actually care about "effort"; the reason your question does or does not "deserve" an answer has everything to do with the site's standards for question quality, and nothing to do with you as a person, your willingness to spend time on a problem etc.
Bluntly, your questions are nowhere near meeting quality standards, in a way that leaves me wondering what attempts you have even made to try to figure out what those standards are. They're explained pretty clearly in the site documentation:
Moving on...
I didn't receive any warnings in my inbox or on my questions and thought I was asking okay questions until I got banned for one of them.
You did, in fact, receive warnings. "Your inbox" is not really a thing that exists on Stack Overflow, most of the time, because this is not social media nor a discussion forum, and we do not have DMs except for very specific moderator intervention situations. There is a notification system for when comments are added to your question, the question is closed or edited, etc. - but when the system warns you about this sort of thing, it is designed to be directly in your way when you try to post or to review your old questions.
Anyway, we know that you received warnings because a) we know how the system works generally and b) in your previous question on Meta, in the comments a moderator showed evidence that the system logged such warnings. If you didn't notice these warnings, I don't know what we can really tell you about that; if you aren't reading what the website tells you, why should we answer your questions and expect you to read and try to understand the answers?
On this site, I thought it was for ban appeals which just seemed like they made sense, but the appeal got taken down.
What you posted cannot in good faith be called an appeal. "[This site] should improve its moderation to allow human beings to make mistakes instead of giving the most severe punishment to people who broke very minor rules in a very obviously accidental way." is not something I would advise anyone, anywhere on the Internet, to say with a straight face as part of a sincere attempt to appeal a ban. (I sincerely hope you are never prosecuted for a crime, because heaven help you if you decide to represent yourself in court and take that kind of attitude with a judge.)
Aside from that, no, that post was not "taken down"; it was closed. Like it says in the big shaded box at the top now, the question "does not appear to seek input and discussion from the community." Hard to disagree with that.
All that said, yes, meta.SO would be a place for ban appeals - among many other things - only after you have thoroughly read through the FAQ link that was given to you both in the comments for that question, and in the system message that told you about the question ban in the first place. However, ban appeals will be summarily dismissed because moderators are not empowered to lift this ban, which is fully automated by the Stack software, which we do not have access to.
I decided to look around and found out that it was like the normal Stack Overflow but seemingly for those that were banned.
I can't imagine how you came to that conclusion. What you propose makes absolutely no sense; why would people who have been banned from using a site, be given an entire parallel site that works the same way to use freely? What would be the point?
I saw a few questions and they were all about Python scripting so I assumed I could ask the same questions here as in the normal Stack Overflow, but my question got taken down AGAIN.
This is an utterly bizarre assertion. I can't see any questions about Python scripting on the front page here. I can very clearly see that the questions are all about the Stack Overflow site itself - because that is the purpose of Meta. This also follows from what the word "meta" means. It also follows from the fact that if I try searching the Meta site for the text "python" I only get a few thousand results (compared to more than 2 million on the main site), and the first few results are clearly talking about stuff like proposals to rename tags on the site, proposals about how the site should do syntax highlighting, etc. It also follows from the fact that there isn't a python
tag here.
Really. Show me even one question that you "saw" and believed was "about Python scripting", which didn't get closed and heavily downvoted.
The mod that took down the question also assumed I was trying to get around a ban even though I wasn't, which just came across as rude.
People coming to reasonable inferences based on the information available to them cannot be called rude. Please try to consider outside perspectives - it is not solely our responsibility to consider your perspective.
I've seen people say it is about Stack Overflow but what do they mean by that? Is it just for questions on how to use the site?
Yes. What else could it mean? I don't see a reason to try to explain this, because I can't see a legitimate reason to be confused about it, and I can't imagine a way to make it clearer than it already is.
It seems simple enough to me to not require an entirely new version of Stack Overflow for this.
... Okay, at this point I cannot resist pointing out the obvious.
If knowing how to use Stack Overflow is so simple, then how have you found this many different ways to get it wrong, to the point where you are posting in frustration with titles like "I don't understand anything on this site"?